From the Valley Courier:
At Wednesday’s natural resources and energy workshop sponsored by Adams State College Community Partnerships, about two dozen of the Valley’s water users, including a few of those whom Gibson calls “water buffalos,” gathered to meet Karuna Eberl, film maker and director/producer of Wandering Dog Films. Eberl and her crew plan to spend the next year and a half gathering the stories of water in the San Luis Valley and creating a series of HD-TV documentaries for nationwide distribution.
Under the nonprofit fiscal sponsorship of EarthNest Institute, based in the Sangre de Cristo Ranches of Fort Garland, the project’s first public gathering showed trailers of the production company’s other documentaries and opened the meeting to questions and comments.
As Eberl explained, “This is your documentary, your story. We’re going to take our time, listening very closely and learning about your complex water issues. And we’re going to tell your stories with integrity and with respect for your differences.”[…]
Those who have a water story to tell, contact Nicole Langley, at EarthNest Institute, at 719-588-4109. To see samples of Karuna Eberl’s documentary film productions, go to www.wanderingdogfilms.com.

I am very glad you are doing this, I am working on another kind of film in the valley, short and poetic.
Be in touch sometime soon. I teach at the University of Colorado at Colorado Springs.
Best to you in your work. Abd let us all think like a watershed.
MJ Sullivan